Before you begin
Create a Switch template.
About this task
Use this task to create ports in bulk.
Procedure
-
Under Configure Ports in
Bulk, select one or more ports and select .
-
If this template applies to a 5570 or 5520 switch, you can
define VIM Port Channelization ports.
-
Under Configure Ports in
Bulk, choose Select
VIM.
-
For a 5570 switch, select VIM-6YE or
VIM-2CE.
-
For a 5520 switch, select VIM-4X,
VIM-4XE, or VIM-4YE.
Note
If different
templates for the same switch SKU are required to be created with
different VIMs, then a classification rule can be created to assign
the same template SKU with different VIM options to different
devices. For more information about classification rules, see
Configure a Classification Rule.
-
Select one or more of these VIM ports and continue to Step
3.
-
Enter a Port
Type name.
-
Toggle Port
Status
On or
Off.
-
Toggle Auto-Sense
On or
Off
(Fabric Engine device only).
Auto-Sense
detects connected device types and automatically configures specific port
settings. Certain port settings are not configurable.
-
In the Port Usage Settings
section, select one of the following port types:
- Auto-Sense
Enabled: The only option if previously selected. (Fabric Engine device only)
- Access
Port: Ports connected to individual hosts such as
printers, servers, and end-user computers.
- Trunk port (802.1Q
VLAN Tagging): Ports connected to network forwarding
devices that support multiple VLANs on trunk ports.
- Phone with a Data
Port: Ports connected to IP phones, and optionally, to
computers cabled to the phones.
-
For an Access
Port, select an existing VLAN or select the add icon to add a
new one.
Tag the VLAN to a particular
access port to control and monitor switch traffic. To add a new VLAN, see
Configure VLAN Settings.
-
For a Trunk
Port, select an existing Native VLAN or
select the add icon to add a new one.
The native (untagged) VLAN is
the VLAN assigned to frames that do not have any 802.1Q VLAN tags in their
headers. By default, Extreme Networks devices also use VLAN 1 as the native
VLAN. To add a new VLAN, see
Configure VLAN Settings.
-
For Allowed
VLANS, enter a specific number or leave the All
default.
-
For Phone with Data
Port (Voice): This option offers additional LLDP and CDP
advertisement options within VLAN settings.
- Voice
VLAN (tagged) and Data
VLAN(untagged) can be specified under the VLAN
Settings tab.
- LLDP Voice VLAN
Options is disabled by default. When toggled ON, by
default,
Enable LLDP advertisement of 802.1 VLAN ID and port protocol of
Voice VLAN is enabled. If checked, select a value for
Enable
LLDP advertisement of med Voice VLAN DSCP Value. If
checked, select a value for Enable LLDP
advertisement of med Voice Signaling VLAN DSCP
Value.
- CDP Voice VLAN
Options is disabled by default. When toggled ON, by
default, Enable CDP advertisement of Voice VLAN and Enable CDP
advertisement of power available are enabled.
Note
If the LLDP/CDP options are
enabled, then CDP/LLDP options within
Transmission
Settings are enabled and grayed out.
-
Under Port
Settings, for Transmission
Settings, configure the following:
- Transmission
Type: Select Auto,
Half-Duplex, or Full-Duplex. Auto causes the switch to negotiate the
best possible duplex mode possible with the connected device.
Full-Duplex forces the switch to communicate with the connected device
using full-duplex communication. Half-Duplex forces the switch to use
half-duplex communication.
- Transmission
Speed: Choose the speed the port uses to communicate
with the connected device.
- LLDP
Transmit: Enables the switch to transmit LLDPDU
frames.
- LLDP
Receive: Enables the switch to receive LLDPDU
frames.
- Enable
CDP: Enables the switch to receive and parse the
information within Cisco CDP frames.
-
For STP:
- STP
Status: Toggle ON to
enable STP for the port.
- Edge
Port: Connects to a user terminal or server, instead of
other switches or shared network segments. A port configured as an edge
port will not cause a loop upon network topology changes.
- BPDU
Protection (Switch Engine
devices only): Use the drop-down list to change BPDU protection to guard
or filter status.
- Guard - Controls whether a port explicitly
configured as Edge will disable itself upon reception of a BPDU.
The port will enter the error-disabled state, and will be
removed from the active topology.
- Disabled - Turns off BPDU Protection.
- Priority:
When this port is an STP edge port, select a port priority for STP from
the drop-down list.
- Enter the Path Cost (bandwidth) for this
port.
-
For Storm
Control:
- Broadcast: Select to include traffic that is forwarded to
all destinations simultaneously.
- Unknown
Unicast: Select to include traffic whose destination
address does not appear in the forwarding database.
- Multicast: Select to include traffic whose destination is a
multicast address.
- TCP-SYN:
Select to include TCP-SYN flood traffic.
- Thresholds: Packet
Based is the default.
- Rate Limit
Type: PPS
(packets per second) is the default.
- Rate Limit
Value: Enter when the switch should discard traffic of
the selected types.
-
For MAC Locking, enable the per port type with the
option to specify Maximum First Arrival Limit and specify
the Link Down Action.
By default,
Link Down Action
it is set to clear first arrival MAC's, with the option to retain MAC's. We also
have the option to take action when MAC's are aged out.
Note
MAC Locking must
also be enabled on a per-port basis within a port type.
-
For ELRP, toggle to
ON to
enable ELRP per port (disabled by default).
-
For PSE, select an
existing profile or select the plus sign to add a new one.
-
Toggle POE Status to the required setting.
-
Select Save Port Type.